Texas will increase checkpoints for trucks crossing from Mexico after migrant smuggling deaths

ByPatrick Svitek, The Texas Tribune
Thursday, June 30, 2022
4 charged in deaths of 53 migrants in trailer in San Antonio, DOJ says
Four people have been arrested and charged in connection with the tragedy in San Antonio where 53 migrants were found dead in a trailer, according to the DOJ.

Gov. Greg Abbott announced Wednesday that Texas will add new checkpoints for trucks entering the state from Mexico after over 50 migrants died in connection with an abandoned tractor-trailer found in San Antonio.

The video above is from a related story.

The Department of Public Safety "will create and implement a checkpoint strategy beginning immediately where they will begin targeting trucks like the one that was used where these people perished," Abbott said during a news conference in Eagle Pass.

SEE RELATED STORY: Young adults, children in Texas trailer tragedy died seeking better lives

DPS directer Steve McCraw suggested the checkpoints would be along "smuggling corridors" that connect ports of entry from Mexico to major Texas cities like San Antonio and Houston. Abbott declined to say where exactly the additional checkpoints will be, saying the state wanted to "surprise the cartels and the smugglers."

Additional details were unclear, including how different the new checkpoints would be from the expanded commercial vehicle inspections that Abbott ordered in April, snarling trade for days along the border and costing the state $4.2 billion by one estimate. He eventually ended that policy as Mexican governors made commitments to better secure their side of the border.

SEE RELATED STORY: 'It was very painful to watch my sister die:' Survivor of smuggling attempt says of journey to US

An Abbott spokesperson referred a request for comment to DPS. A spokesperson for the agency, Travis Considine, said in a text message that the inspections "won't occur at POEs," or ports of entry - which was the case in April. That suggests the checkpoints will happen further inland.

McCraw said the agency would be taking some of its troopers inspecting vehicles at the international bridges "and mov[ing] them further out" for the new checkpoints. DPS is also bringing in "commercial vehicle enforcement strike teams" from outside the border region, he said.

The San Antonio truck was discovered Monday evening on San Antonio's southwest Side. A Mexican official says there were 67 inside the trailer and 53 are dead.

Three people were taken into custody after the discovery.

WATCH: Advocate says it's not time for fear-mongering after smuggling operation

Gov. Abbott blamed these deaths on Biden's 'open border policies,' but an immigration advocate disagrees, saying if the border was open, migrants wouldn't take extreme measures to get here.

The owners of a South Texas trucking company have said they believe the truck found in San Antonio was "cloned" to look like one of theirs but that it is not. McCraw said DPS will be focusing on such trucks with the new checkpoints.

U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Laredo, told the Associated Press on Wednesday that the truck found in San Antonio had made it through a Border Patrol checkpoint along Interstate 35 northeast of Laredo, but he didn't know if the migrants were in the trailer when it went through the checkpoint.

"They're using cloned trucks and vehicles that appear to be legitimate, that look like they're legitimate, that's easy to pass through the particular checkpoint, but I can assure you our troopers will be able to identify whether they're legitimate or not and take action at that point in time," McCraw said.

After authorities found the truck Monday in San Antonio, Abbott quickly blamed President Joe Biden and his border policies. Abbott continued to blast Biden on Wednesday, claiming that the truck was "not inspected" at the Border Patrol checkpoint "because Border Patrol does not have the resources to be able to inspect all of the trucks."

The Texas Tribune is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans - and engages with them - about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.